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Home>Making the most of Really Simple Syndication

Windows Secrets Newsletter • Issue 310 • 2011-10-20 • Circulation: over 400,000


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Table of contents 
  • Top Story: Making the most of Really Simple Syndication
  • Lounge Life: When you think your trouble is a software virus
  • Wacky Web Week: A few simple experiments — just for fun
  • LangaList Plus: More information on Windows 7′s XP Mode
  • Briefing Session: Windows Phone 7.5: Evolution, Part 2
  • In the Wild: The myths and facts of zero-day threats

 
Top Story

Making the most of Really Simple Syndication


Woody leonhard By Woody Leonhard

Almost all sufficiently advanced websites these days use RSS — Really Simple Syndication — to keep you notified of the latest information posted on the site.

If you’ve never used an RSS feed — or if you use RSS but don’t know how it works — you’re in for a pleasant surprise.

RSS feeds bring information to you. Instead of making you scour the Web, checking on the latest and greatest news, most established websites feed you short synopses of what they posted.

It’s hard to draw an accurate analogy for RSS feeds, but I like to compare them to a magazine display rack: the front covers of most magazines feature a handful (maybe two handfuls) of short descriptions referring to the content inside. Most of the time, you can glance at the cover of a magazine and tell, more or less, whether it contains anything that interests you.

When you look at a rack of magazines, you’re looking at the distilled contents of dozens or even hundreds of publications. In the course of a few minutes, you can tell from a lot of covers what’s worth a second look.

Now imagine your own personal magazine rack, where you get to choose from the magazines on display. More than that, imagine a rack with rapidly updated content — with the magazine covers announcing the changes.

That, to me, is the essence of RSS feeds. Each website publishes a list of its headlines. Your news reader retrieves those headlines every minute or two and then displays them to you. If you see something you like, click on it, and your browser goes to the article that you clicked.

How websites expose information using RSS

Every news website, most blogs, lots of commercial sites, and even some just-plain-fun sites have RSS feeds. If you have a blog and use any of the major blogging packages — such as WordPress — the RSS feed is built into the site. You don’t have to do anything to create an RSS feed because the blogging software takes care of it automatically.

Here’s how the RSS process works:

  1. Website designers who want to keep folks updated via RSS create a specially formatted file — called an RSS feed file — and place it in a preordained location on the website.

  2. When the website has something new to broadcast, it adds a short, new item to the beginning of the RSS feed file and drops the last item off the end.

  3. A program on your computer, called an RSS reader, collects the names of all the sites you want to follow. Telling your RSS reader that you want to follow a site is called subscribing — just as if you were subscribing to a magazine.

  4. Periodically, your RSS reader goes out to see whether anything new is in the RSS feed files and then displays the updated information.

Really simple, eh?

Using iGoogle to bring in the feeds

You can take your pick of dozens of RSS readers. If you like, you can use the RSS readers built into Internet Explorer, Firefox, or Chrome. Personally, I find all of them intrusive and hard to work with. My personal choice for an RSS reader is a customized page from Google called iGoogle.

Google also has a website, called (confusingly) Google Reader, which can retrieve all your designated RSS feeds. They show up on a webpage in your browser. You might prefer this method, but I’ll stick with iGoogle.

Here’s how to get started with iGoogle:

  1. If you don’t already have a Google ID, go to Gmail.com and create a new e-mail account.

  2. Fire up your favorite browser and navigate to iGoogle.com. You see a sign-up page that says Create your own homepage in under 30 seconds. Click your stopwatch.

  3. Check the boxes for any interests that pertain to you (or don’t check any at all, if you don’t want Google to suggest RSS-enabled sites for you), choose a theme (the plain Google theme, the first one, works fine), enter your city and country, then click See your page. Your iGoogle home page appears — it took less than 30 seconds, yes?

  4. You may be a bit underwhelmed by Google’s default choices — Weather, Date & Time, a link to Gmail, another one to YouTube’s recommended video, and CNN.com for news. But be of good cheer; you can get rid of all of them immediately and easily.

  5. In the upper-right corner, click the Sign In link and sign into iGoogle using your Gmail account. That procedure saves your iGoogle page. Any changes made to the page will appear in the future when you sign in to iGoogle again.

  6. Play around with the iGoogle page. See how you can click and drag the individual site feeds (Google calls them gadgets) and locate them anywhere on the page you like. Click the down arrow on the right in the CNN.com gadget. One of the options says Delete This Gadget. Click it. That’s how easy it is to delete an existing feed.

  7. Now look on the right side of the page, near the top, for the Add Stuff link; click it. Google will show you a couple of dozen suggested RSS feeds, er, Gadgets. In the upper-right corner, under Search for Gadgets, you’ll see a white box. Type the name of a site you’re interested in (your favorite news organization, for example) and click Search.

    There are other ways to add RSS feeds, which I mention below. So if you can’t find your favorite organization or topic just yet, don’t worry.

  8. When you find a site that you want to add to your iGoogle page, click the box that says Add it now. When you’re finished adding to your list, click the link in the upper-right corner that says Back to Gallery. That’s it! You don’t need to save anything; it’s saved for you, automatically.

Adding RSS feeds to your iGoogle page

After you have your iGoogle page laid out, it’s easy to add more feeds. Here’s how:

  1. Navigate to the site that you want to add to your iGoogle page. If the site has an RSS feed available, you see an orange radio-wave icon or an orange RSS box, sometimes next to the word Subscribe.

  2. Select and copy the address (URL) of the page you want to add to iGoogle.

  3. Now go back to iGoogle.com. On the left, click the link to Add Feed or Gadget — a box appears that says Type or paste the URL below.

  4. Paste the copied URL and click Add. If you did everything correctly, iGoogle will come back with a check mark and the word Accepted (or something similar).

  5. To return to the iGoogle home page, click the Go back to iGoogle home link in the upper-left corner of the Add Feed page. You should now find the new gadget on your home page, where you can click and drag it anywhere you like — or change settings by clicking the drop-down arrow in the upper-right corner.

Every few minutes, iGoogle reaches out to all the sites on your iGoogle home page and retrieves the latest news from the sites’ RSS feeds.

If you aren’t using RSS feeds to save time hunting information on the Web, this is your golden opportunity to get started. By letting sites push data to you, you can save yourself an enormous amount of time and hassle.

Feedback welcome: Have a question or comment about this story? Post your thoughts, praise, or constructive criticisms in the WS Columns forum.


 
Lounge Life

When you think your trouble is a software virus


By Kathleen Atkins

You might be heavy-hearted this week if you, like Lounge member Dougie, were listing the interesting but discouraging symptoms exhibited by a crippled PC.

Dougie hopes that fellow Loungers in the Security & Backups forum can help him avoid a clean install of the machine to return it to a healthy state. He might be in luck — suggestions posted so far sound promising.

But along with the direct help offered to Dougie, a debate sprang up concerning malware expertise and where to find it. See what the Lounge members think about that: More»

The following links are this week’s most interesting Lounge threads, including several new questions to which you might be able to provide responses:

Office Applications
General Productivity 
Desktop applications taught in school?

Word Processing 
Style management in Word 2010 is a puzzle

Spreadsheets 
Stumped by INDIRECT and an external 3D reference

Databases 
Automatic check for folder content?
☼
Visual Basic for Apps 
Code not working in 2010

Microsoft Outlook 
Other user’s appointments off by one hour

Non-Outlook E-mail 
Safe to remove WLM .eml files?
☼
Windows
General Windows 
I need a CD to burn that has format tools

Windows 7
Anyone had problems since October updates?
Are Windows 7 file properties real?
Uninvited install attempt
☼


Windows Vista 
USB not working after system crash
☼
Windows XP 
Clicking C drive opens Windows Search instead
☼
Windows Servers 
Fine-tuning Exchange mailbox-retirement procedures

Internet/Connectivity
Internet Explorer 
What does “The webpage hosts another webpage” mean?

Third-Party Browsers 
Upgrade to Firefox 7.0.1 problems
☼
Application Servers 
SharePoint problem: can’t save to shared folder

Networking
Cannot secure wireless network
☼
Social Media 
Facebook equals breach of privacy

Other Technologies
Non-Microsoft OSes 
How to set up VirtualBox and a second OS, Linux Mint?
☼
Security & Backups 
I think it is a virus
☼
Other Applications 
Looking for a good file manager to replace Windows Explorer
☼

☼ starred posts — particularly useful

If you’re not already a Lounge member, use the quick registration form to sign up for free. The ability to post comments and take advantage of other Lounge features is available only to registered members.

If you’re already registered, you can jump right into today’s discussions in the Lounge.

The Lounge Life column is a digest of the best of the WS Lounge discussion board. Kathleen Atkins is associate editor of Windows Secrets.

 
Wacky Web Week

A few simple experiments — just for fun

Ten fun science experiments By Kathleen Atkins

All experiments are meant to be reproduced. Usually this happens in a sophisticated lab with highly qualified technicians and scientists.

Experiments are typically not considered a source of fun at parties with friends and family — unless, of course, they involve seeing how fast a human being can chug a six-pack of beer. But for those odd few who just have to show off their scientific acumen, here’s a video we think will help: Play the video




 
LangaList Plus

More information on Windows 7′s XP Mode

Fred langa By Fred Langa

Responding to my story about setting up Win7′s XP Mode, many readers asked how to get XP Mode–like functionality on systems running Vista and Win7 Home Premium.

Related virtualization questions were also on their minds.


Alternatives to Microsoft’s XP Mode application

Reader Rich Kaplan runs Windows 7 Home Premium, and he’s seeking XP virtualization software that will work on his OS. The answer for his system also applies to Vista — and Windows XP itself.

  • “Hi. Per the Sept. 22 Top Story, ‘Using Windows 7′s XP Mode — step by step,’ what do you do if you have Win7 Home Premium or some other Windows version that doesn’t support XP Mode?”

Easy answer, Rich. There are excellent, free, third-party, virtual-machine applications available for all versions of Windows. At the end of that story, I listed the two most prominent offerings:

  • Oracle’s VirtualBox (free)
  • VMware’s VPC products (free, trialware, and commercial)

Either will give you the same results as using Win7′s standard XP Mode. The basic installation and usage concepts are also similar.

There are a few important differences, however. Recall that running XP Mode is a two-part system: XP Mode, a preconfigured copy of the XP operating system, fully ready to run inside a virtual PC; and Windows Virtual PC (VPC), the software that creates the virtual-PC environment. That’s why there are two separate downloads needed to get XP Mode going.

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Briefing Session

Windows Phone 7.5: Evolution, Part 2

Chris-Murray-1 By Chris Murray

In Part 1 of this two-part series, I reviewed a number of Windows Phone 7.5′s important new improvements — including Live Tiles, application switching, the Hub, and searches.

In Part 2, I delve into e-mail, browsing, voice recognition, Windows Phone 7′s application Marketplace, and more.


Showing the entire conversation in one place

With Windows Phone 7.5 (or Mango), the Messaging app has a new twist: threaded messages. Mango users can now seamlessly switch between texting and either Windows Live Messenger or Facebook Chat from within a single message thread. Switching between texting and chat services is a seamless, two-tap process. A new messaging pivot — Online — shows who’s available to chat. (Each screen within an application is called a pivot.)

Like messaging, Mango’s e-mail app now has an optional, threaded conversation view. No more sifting through your Sent folder to see what you said — you get the whole conversation in one place. Simply tap grouped e-mails to reveal all related messages and then select the specific one you want to see.

As a school teacher with thousands of parent e-mails, I was initially thrilled with my Outlook account. Unfortunately, Mango tangled my e-mail conversations into a jumbled mess of randomly selected messages. If you’re using a high-traffic e-mail account, I highly recommend turning off this option.

Fortunately, Conversation View does work well with my Gmail account, so I’ve kept Conversation View enabled. Another option is to link inboxes together, making messages from all your e-mail accounts appear in one location — one inbox to rule them all.

Faster browsing, but with an annoying layout

Mango’s browser app has undergone a big transformation. Instead of WP7′s IE 6/IE 7 mishmash of a browser, Mango comes with an IE 9 derivative. This brings full HTML5 support to Windows Phone. Along with this, the browser’s layout has been treated to a few tweaks. The URL bar is now at the bottom of the screen, and it’s always there — even in landscape mode.

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In the Wild

The myths and facts of zero-day threats

Robert vamosi By Robert Vamosi

A new Microsoft study finds malware more often targets patched vulnerabilities than those still awaiting a patch (zero-day infections).

Additionally, over the first half of 2011, user downloads and compromised removable drives were more likely to lead to malware infections than any other method.


Microsoft’s latest report on PC Internet security

In its 11th survey of malware, Microsoft’s Security Intelligence Report identified an important shift in the PC-threat landscape. The threats were detected by the Malicious Software Removal Tool (MSRT) during the first half of 2011. Additional data was collected by Microsoft’s Malware Protection Center, Security Response Center, and Digital Crimes Unit as well as other Microsoft sources.

The typical PC security vulnerability is based on one or more software flaws. Cyber criminals exploit these flaws to do bad things. But not all vulnerabilities lead to exploits, and not all exploits lead to malware.

It may surprise you to learn that zero-day (unpatched) threats are not the ones we should fear the most. Ironically, the cyber criminal’s favorite targets are well-known, already-patched vulnerabilities because — human nature being what it is — we don’t always get around to patching our systems. Our own actions often put us at risk, typically via malware that tricks us into downloading malicious code. We then often compound the problem, spreading the infection through our indiscriminate use of those handy removable-media devices such as USB flash drives.

Bye-bye, drive-by personal-computer infections

In its report, Microsoft catalogued the various ways that malware threats are currently propagated. Many of the report’s findings run counter to what we’ve been told by the antivirus community. For example, the report states that a plurality of the malware threats, 45 percent, require some sort of user interaction — meaning the end user had to download and/or click something to become infected. (The techniques used to trick users into clicking on a malicious link, image, or file are often referred to as social engineering.)

The next-highest malware propagation method — accounting for 26 percent of detected threats — is through the use of Windows’ Autorun, an automatic application-launching system triggered when users insert removable media. Using Autorun over network connections made up another 17 percent of the threats. Combined, that’s 43 percent of all malware threats recorded by Microsoft.

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YOUR SUBSCRIPTION

The Windows Secrets Newsletter is published weekly on the 1st through 4th Thursdays of each month, plus occasional news updates. We skip an issue on the 5th Thursday of any month, the week of Thanksgiving, and the last two weeks of August and December. Windows Secrets is a continuation of four merged publications: Brian's Buzz on Windows and Woody's Windows Watch in 2004, the LangaList in 2006, and the Support Alert Newsletter in 2008.

Publisher: WindowsSecrets.com, 1218 Third Ave., Suite 1515, Seattle, WA 98101 USA. Vendors, please send no unsolicited packages to this address (readers' letters are fine).

Editor in chief: Tracey Capen. Senior editors: Fred Langa, Woody Leonhard. Copyeditor: Roberta Scholz. Program director: Tony Johnston. Contributing editors: Yardena Arar, Susan Bradley, Scott Dunn, Michael Lasky, Scott Mace, Ryan Russell, Lincoln Spector, Robert Vamosi, Becky Waring. Product manager: Andy Boyd. Advertising director: Eric Gilley.

Trademarks: Microsoft and Windows are registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation. The Windows Secrets series of books is published by Wiley Publishing Inc. The Windows Secrets Newsletter, WindowsSecrets.com, Support Alert, LangaList, LangaList Plus, WinFind, Security Baseline, Patch Watch, Perimeter Scan, Wacky Web Week, the Logo Design (W, S or road, and Star), and the slogan Everything Microsoft Forgot to Mention all are trademarks and service marks of WindowsSecrets.com. All other marks are the trademarks or service marks of their respective owners.

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Copyright © 2012 by WindowsSecrets.com. All rights reserved.

Table of contents

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  • Pros and cons of a ‘keyfile’ password 4.21
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  • Putting Registry-/system-cleanup apps to the test 4.19
  • One year and 99 security bulletins later 4.18
  • 1.8TB external drive goes down hard 4.17
  • Don’t pay for software you don’t need — Part 3 4.16
  • Internet Explorer gets another round of patches 4.15
  • Is your free AV tool a ‘resource pig?’ 4.15
  • Vacation’s over; it’s a big round of patches 4.15
  • Remote access leads to remote attacks 4.15
  • Keeping you up to date: say no to .NET — again 4.14
  • Take control of Google’s privacy policy settings 4.14
  • Office File Validation patch leads to problems 4.14
  • The advanced system-recover toolkit 4.13
  • New “419″ scam involves PayPal and Western Union 4.12
  • Readers’ best personal-privacy tips 4.11
  • Getting the most from Windows Search — Part 2 4.11
  • Re-examining Dropbox and its alternatives 4.10
  • Easily edit Windows’ right-click context menus 4.09
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Trademarks: Microsoft and Windows are registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation. The Windows Secrets series of books is published by Wiley Publishing Inc. The Windows Secrets Newsletter, WindowsSecrets.com, WinFind, Windows Gizmos, Security Baseline, Patch Watch, Perimeter Scan, Wacky Web Week, the Logo Design (W, S or road, and Star), and the slogan Everything Microsoft Forgot to Mention all are trademarks and service marks of iNET Interactive. All other marks are the trademarks or service marks of their respective owners.
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